There were more than 4.5 million removals, returns and expulsions from February 2021, President Joe Biden’s first month in office, to November 2024.
The world's richest man Elon Musk got into a heated row Thursday with a Danish astronaut who criticized the tech billionaire's claim that former president Joe Biden intentionally abandoned two
It was just one sign of Musk’s emerging influence and how the world’s wealthiest man — who once backed Democrats Barack Obama and Joe Biden — has become a conservative power center in his own
The billionaire got into it with a Danish astronaut after they questioned his tale about astronauts stuck in space
White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller answered a question about people insisting Elon Musk is an “unelected bureaucrat" in the Trump administration.
The president and his right-hand man baselessly accused Joe Biden of stranding Boeing astronauts on the ISS for political reasons.
SpaceX CEO Elon Musk and Danish astronaut Andreas Mogensen got into a heated exchange on X this Thursday. Mogensen, who once served as the commander of the International Space Station (ISS), took to X to call out Elon Musk for claiming that Williams and Wilmore were left stranded in space by former president Joe Biden.
Elon Musk began his top-secret Department of Government Efficiency takeover of the federal government while former President Joe Biden was still in office. The world’s richest man was able to hit the ground running on President Donald Trump’s first day in office because his team had already begun infiltrating the U.
There were more than 4.5 million removals, returns and expulsions from February 2021, President Joe Biden’s first month in office, to November 2024.
Elon Musk accused former President Joe Biden of leaving two astronauts stranded aboard the International Space Station for “political reasons.”
Elon Musk has accused Joe Biden of leaving astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams 'stranded' in space for 'political reasons' as Donald Trump claims the former president didn't plan to bring them
When President Joe Biden put $42 billion behind making high-speed internet accessible across the US, he committed to doing it the old-fashioned way – with miles upon miles of fiber-optic lines.